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Connecticut’s Health Care System . Ellen Andrews Consumer Health Action Network 6/28/05. CT’s Health Care Dollar (2000 – CMS). Growth in CT’s health care costs annual growth, CMS. Costs of Health Care in CT. CT spends 11% of our Gross State Product on health care
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Connecticut’s Health Care System Ellen Andrews Consumer Health Action Network 6/28/05
Costs of Health Care in CT • CT spends 11% of our Gross State Product on health care • In 2000 we spent $4991.18 per person -- 24% higher than the US average • 6th most expensive state in US for single coverage -- 5th highest for family coverage • Average CT premiums up 56% since 2000, but wages are only up 14%
Why is health care so expensive? • First, because one in ten CT residents doesn’t have coverage • That costs us an extra $198 for single coverage and $583 for CT families • Drivers of cost growth (2003) • Drugs grew 41% faster than health care overall • Administration (incl. Profits) grew 74% faster • Hospital costs were growing faster, but have slowed
Health care is critical to CT’s economy • One in nine CT workers is employed in healthcare services • From 1990 to 2002 health care jobs grew by 34% while overall job growth was only 2.7% • Health care providers lead the list of highest paid workers in a wealthy state – 5 of top 6 • Every dollar spent on Medicaid in CT creates $2.09 in business activity, generating 31,695 jobs and $4.5 billion in wages • CT is central to the growing “US healthcare epicenter” from DC to Boston corridor • Stock analysts consistently advise their clients to invest in healthcare during troubled times
Number of Uninsured in CT = The populations of the City of New Haven + City of Hartford + City of Waterbury CT’s Uninsured is not a small problem
Who is uninsured in CT?(2004 – OHCA) • Two out of three are workers • Three out of four make less than CT’s median income • Tend to be single, young adults • Nine out of ten do not have a college degree • Hispanics in CT are 5 times more likely to be uninsured
Who are CT’s Uninsured? • Income is most closely correlated with insurance • Most uninsured workers are employed at small firms (<50 workers) • For 6 in 10, their employer does not offer coverage • Another 14% are not eligible for health benefits at work • Half are temporary or part-time
It’s not healthy to be uninsured • CT’s uninsured are 10 times less likely to get care for an injury and 7 times less likely to get care for a medical emergency • The uninsured often go without screenings and preventive care • 12% of hospital stays for the uninsured could have been prevented with early treatment, each avoidable stay averaged $3300 in 2002 • The uninsured are less likely to access on-going care to manage chronic diseases • Uninsured Americans are less healthy and die earlier
It’s expensive to be uninsured • While the uninsured use half as much health care as the rest of us, they pay far more out of pocket • Half of bankruptcies are due to high medical bills • The uninsured are four times more likely to delay seeking medical care due to cost • The uninsured often pay the highest prices for their care, the full retail price – e.g. HMOs average 60% discount off charges, discount not available to uninsured
It’s not good for communities either • Taxpayers fund 80 to 85% of care for uninsured • Financial strains on safety net providers, funded with public dollars • Access to care is lower for everyone in communities with higher rates of uninsured • Hospitals have fewer beds • Less likely to offer trauma and burn care • Providers raise rates to cover uninsured patients, raising local costs of care and premiums • Public health hazards of increased populations with untreated disease
Options • Tax credits – individuals, small business • Expand public programs • Various carrots & sticks for employers • Individual mandates • Pools – small business, HUSKY, non-profit, private for-profit, MEHIP • Better consumer information about options • Bare bones, reduce mandates • Defined contributions/HSAs/consumer-directed health plans • COBRA assistance • Expand clinics and other safety net providers • Cost controls • Universal health care
HUSKY • Covers 327,904 low-income CT residents, who would be uninsured if not for HUSKY • Covers 1 in every 5 CT children and 1 in every four CT births • Comprehensive, affordable coverage, far better than most low wage earners could get from employers • Coverage now for parents and grandparents raising grandchildren up to 150% FPL
No need to cut HUSKY • Children and families are the least expensive to cover – Families make up 73% of CT Medicaid recipients but use only 18% of the dollars • Medicaid is more cost-effective than private insurance – study finds moving privately insured adults to Medicaid could save 16% • HUSKY cost only $2090 per person last year, compare to $5000 single coverage premium average for small businesses • CT Medicaid spending is under control – less than other states, fed.s, private increases
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